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"A bizarre connection..."

3 Comments -

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Blogger bumblepanda said...

As I have just experienced the pangs of not being able to edit my post-post-post, I feel I left out one crucial, yet hopefully self-evident, question- are we all doomed???? If I wear those stinky-feet nano socks am I just as bad as Eve???? How does this particular view of Frankenstein bare on everything else cyborg related that we are learning about?...D O O M E D??????

12:51 PM

Blogger Allison Muri said...

Lesley's comment isn't really a bizarre connection at all. In fact, it raises some very interesting issues about the division of knowledge that occurred well after Sidney wrote his defence of poetry in the 16th century. Well into the 18th century, poetry and "science" weren't entirely separate entities, though they were on their way. At the end of the 18th century Erasmus Darwin (Charles' grandfarther), for example, wrote an incredible poem that was focused on the leading science of the day, on natural philosophy and botany, called Zoonomia. It was written in rhyming couplets, and peopled with poetic figures, but it espoused a theory on the origins of organic life from one vital spark that developed into various life forms. "Knowledge" was poetry and science.

All through the 18th century, the quest for knowledge was represented as an ideal and even spiritual pursuit to know, understand, and reveal God's works. There is also resistance to certain kinds of knowledge, however, and to some extent Frankenstein reflects this resistance. But I do think Shelley contrasts forms of knowledge: the knowledge given by nature to a blank-slate mind such as the creature's; the knowledge provided by "literary" texts - Milton's poetry for example; and the knowledge of the origins of life ("penetrating" Nature's secrets).

1:19 PM

Blogger Allison Muri said...

"grandfarther" indeed! I really wish we could edit comments like we can edit the primary posts!

10:04 PM

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